Emergence of Relationship Selling in the Information Economy

  1. 1.2 Describe the emergence of relationship selling in the age of information

The restructuring of America from an industrial economy to an information economy began approximately 50 years ago (Figure 1.2). During this period, our economy began shifting from an emphasis on industrial activity to an emphasis on information processing. America was giving way to a new society where most of us would work with information instead of producing goods.5 Today, we live in an age in which the effective exchange of information is the foundation of most economic transactions, and the implications for personal selling are profound. We will describe the four major developments that have shaped the information economy and discuss the implications for personal selling.

An illustration lists the highlights of industrial and information economy.

Figure 1.2

The age of information has greatly influenced personal selling. Today, salespeople use a variety of information technology tools to gather and process information of value to the customer. They recognize that information is a strategic resource and relationship skills are needed to build a conduit of trust for information acceptance.

Major Advances in Information Technology and Electronic Commerce

The information age has spawned the information technology revolution. Technology as well as globalization and speed of change influence almost everything we do.6 Salespeople and other marketing-related players in today’s information age use personal computers, mobile phones, smartphones, websites, customer relationship management (CRM) applications with cloud computing, e-mail, instant messaging, blogging, and social media such as Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, and others. Frequently referred to today as Selling 2.0, these information technology tools, along with innovative sales practices, are used to create value for both the buyer and seller by improving the speed, collaboration, customer engagement, and accountability of the sales process.

The explosive growth of electronic commerce and other Internet activities has changed the way in which computers are used. Stan Davis, futurist and coauthor of Blur: The Speed of Change in the Connected Economy, notes that in today’s information economy we use computers less for data crunching and more for connecting. These connections involve people-to-people, company-to-customer, machine-to-machine, product-to-service, organization-to-organization, and all these in combination.7 The jobs of information-age workers depend on these connections. People who work extensively with information, such as salespeople, need these electronic connections to conduct their information gathering, information sharing, and information management responsibilities.

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